1 / 12

Naming Ionic Compounds

Naming Ionic Compounds. Transition Metals and Polyatomic ions. Remember:. No prefixes !!!!!! Write the name of the metal. Write the name of the non-metal. Change the ending of the non-metal to “ide” Ex: NaCl  sodium chloride. Transition Metals:.

qamra
Download Presentation

Naming Ionic Compounds

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Naming Ionic Compounds Transition Metals and Polyatomic ions

  2. Remember: • No prefixes !!!!!! • Write the name of the metal. • Write the name of the non-metal. • Change the ending of the non-metal to “ide” Ex: NaCl  sodium chloride

  3. Transition Metals: • Nearly all the transition metals are able to form more than one cation or are multi-valent. • Ex: iron can form Fe2+ and Fe3+. Given the formula of an ionic compound you can use the reverse cross-over method to determine the charge of the cation. Ex: FeCl3

  4. Stock System: • The charge of the cation is written in parentheses as a roman numeral. Ex: Fe3+ would be iron (III) and Fe2+ would be iron (II). • Remember roman numerals: 1-(I), 2- (II), 3-(III), 4-(IV), 5-(V).

  5. Example: • Both CuO and Cu2O are real compounds • We know that O always has a charge of -2 • For CuO, we know that it is the Cu+2 ion (sum to zero)  copper (II) oxide • And for the Cu2O, we know that there is 2 x the Cu+1 ion (to sum to zero)  copper (I) oxide

  6. Try to write names for these (don’t forget the roman numberial for the metal) : • CrO • Au3P • SnCl4

  7. Given the name we can write the formula: • Nickel (III) bromide • We know that Br is always Br-1 • We also know that this is the Ni3+ ion (it tell us in the brackets) • Therefore we need 3 x Br-1 with Ni3+ for the compound to be neutral (sum to zero)  NiBr3

  8. Try these: • lead (II) chloride • mercury (I) arsenide • cobalt (II) chloride.

  9. Polyatomic Ions • Have a charge ( + or - ) • Consists of two or more non-metal atoms (or metal complex) joined by a covalent bond • Act as a single unit

  10. Write names for ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions: • Na2CO3 • KOH • Sn3(PO4)4

  11. Writing chemical formulas for ionic compounds containing polyatomic ions: (remember to use parentheses to indicate the correct number of ions) • ammonium sulfide • lead (IV) hydrogen carbonate • calcium hydroxide • magnesium nitrate

  12. Practice: handout

More Related